OpenOffice.org 3.0.0 RC2

The release candidate 2 of OpenOffice.org 3.0 is now ready for testing. This test release is made available to allow a broad user base to test and evaluate the next major version of OpenOffice.org, but is not recommended for production use at this stage.

OpenOffice is a great free alternative for opening and creating office documents. OpenOffice 3 series is compatible with Microsoft Office 2007 documents. OpenOffice 3 will open Microsoft Office Word, Excel, and Powerpoint documents, allow you to edit them, and also save them back in Microsoft’s format, where other users of the Microsoft Office suites can open them.

OpenOffice.org 3.0.0 RC2 Release Notes

Download OpenOffice.org 3.0.0 RC2

Posted under Software

This post was written by Veg on September 23, 2008

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Novell drives nail into Microsoft Office coffin

The news that Novell has released an Office Open XML (OOXML) translator for OpenOffice.org is yet another nail in the coffin of the office productivity franchise known as Microsoft Office. However, if the open source crowd is really serious about denting Microsoft’s dominance in this space, what is needed is a little Evolution.

With the translator, Microsoft cannot hold customers captive to Office 2007. OpenOffice.org users don’t have to worry about receiving a Microsoft Word (and hopefully soon Excel and Powerpoint) file they can’t read. Now the onus is on Microsoft to update Office 2007 to include open document format (ODF) capability, which OpenOffice.org already has and is being increasingly recognized as a global standard.

Looking at OpenOffice.org as a dispassionate business user who has just downloaded the free software for a new Windows notebook rather than buy a copy of Office 2007, I am quite happy with my new office suite - except for one thing. This otherwise excellent package does not provide an equivalent open source desktop email and calendaring client to Microsoft’s Outlook. This is a shame because I use Outlook at least as much as Word.

I can almost hear the Linux crowd jumping up and down screaming: “Move over to Linux and you can have it all - OpenOffice.org plus the Linux-based equivalent to Outlook, Evolution.” My answer is yes Evolution is what I want - but I want it on Windows.

The problem is that the year of the Linux desktop has still not arrived. Perhaps vendors like Dell and IBM should and will help bring it on sooner rather than later. Then we can all buy Linux pre-loaded on our desktops and notebooks that will just work with our wireless networks and peripherals when we turn it on without having to do any major configuring.

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Posted under Tech News

This post was written by Nicki on March 6, 2007

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